The Flare collection by Italy-based studio Draga & Aurel is a tangible representation of light refractions in a kaleidoscopic offering of home furnishings.
The Echo Collection by multi-hyphenate Kelly Wearstler explores design's iterative process and the beauty of the arch through a series of tables, seating, and sculpture.
Frank Stella presents Recent Sculpture at Jeffrey Deitch Gallery in New York, that shifts in color, towers tall, and appears to defy gravity.
Moral Turgeman and Kelsey Falter, of Raise the Moral Studio, invite viewers to find beauty in the banal and become familiar with perception.
Darren Appiagyei works with raw wood, highlighting each piece's imperfections. Today, he joins us for Friday Five, sharing a favorite childhood game, the significance of a stool + more.
Ceramic artist Olivia Cognet's latest work includes sculptural lamps, mirrors, and vases in abstract, organic forms influenced by the Cote d’Azur + California.
Frero's Tala Asa light objects are inspired by the earth, with each using light to focus on the shadow play of the lamp's negative space.
SOFTlab's Halo, commissioned by Google's Mountain View HQ, is a pavilion-like public artwork that leaves visitors with the feeling of having entered a geode.
This Orca Island sculptor explores the intersection of traditional methods and modernist forms, carving a bestiary of imaginative geometric shapes.
A massive ziggurat-like structure of dirt seems to levitate off the floor in New York City, offering a profoundly sacred connection with soil, light, scent, and time.
Rive Roshan's Design Miami exhibit, in collaboration with Rademakers, may have been temporary, but reflection on the space between continues.
How do you secure a 2,700-pound aluminum sculpture of the world's fastest passenger plane over diners? Carefully.
Raque Ford’s checkered plexiglass dance floor on view in Brooklyn for the B-side: (Broken) Memory and Remix group exhibition exemplifies elements of Hip-Hop.
DIORAMA sculptures by Amy Cushing + Lara Sparey combine mixed media to create an urban cityscape with fantasy, dream-like color.
If you missed out on this year's new and now of the NYC art scene or you're looking to revisit your favorite posts, browse everything our Unframed art column showcased in 2023.